Arizona Solar Center Blog

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Earth Day: Education at its roots

Earth Day is April 22nd. This marks the 46th Earth Day, and over the years it has taken on many different meanings for many different people.

I still have a vivid memory of the first Earth Day in 1970. I was a junior high student in Lyons, Kansas. A teacher, whose name in my memory has been lost to time and the events of life, championed the cause at our school.

For a 15-minute period that bright, sunny April morning, we were released from class with the simple instruction to go outside and do something good for the planet.

I found a tree at the southeast corner of the football field. It was tucked away in a corner next to the gymnasium and the shop building. I spent my 15 minutes cleaning up broken glass that was scattered on the ground around the base of this majestic tree. The glass was green, most likely from a Mountain Dew or Teem bottle of pop, as both were produced at the Pepsi Cola bottling plant on the north edge of our little town.

A teacher's simple instruction and a 15-minute hands-on activity made a lasting impression on me and opened my eyes to the collective impact of many small individual actions on our environment.

We have come a long way since that April morning 46 years ago. This memory reminds me that outside of my own family, teachers have been some of most influential people in my life. But our education system, here and across the country, is facing a funding crisis that threatens the quality of education that future generations will receive. This threat is across the board -- from the visual and performing arts to the scientific and technology fields.

With Earth Day as a backdrop, Americans are increasingly finding themselves confronted with issues that require scientific judgments. Who hasn't heard a politician utter nonsense about not being a scientist as an excuse to do nothing about climate change, or to deny the evidence from those who are scientists. And they are getting away with it because of a largely illiterate public that doesn't understand science either.

Unfortunately, less than one in five Americans could be said to be scientifically savvy, and this will continue to be at the heart of many of our societal problems unless we find a way to adequately fund our education system.

Professor Jon Miller of the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan has spent his entire career attempting to define and measure scientific knowledge in the United States. Not surprisingly, his findings show a linkage between schooling and adult scientific skills, and in short, that most Americans don't have a clue.

At a time when science permeates our national debates on issues like climate change, our citizenry's inability to understand basic scientific concepts makes it hard to follow, let alone participate in, these debates.

This Earth Day, when you contemplate your impact on our environment also contemplate how we can attract the best people into the teaching profession. After all, we ignore our collective scientific literacy at our peril.

Jim ArwoodCommunications DirectorArizona Solar Center

Question: Is it acceptable to have leaders making decisions on the future of the planet who are admittedly unprepared regarding the most important scientific and technical issues of our time?

About the author

Jim Arwood served six Arizona governors in various capacities managing federal energy programs, culminating in his appointment by then Governor Janet Napolitano, as Director of the State Energy Office in 2006. After nearly 25 years serving the state of Arizona, Mr. Arwood retired from government service in 2010 and today consults for a variety of energy related organizations. He also serves as Director of Communications for the Arizona Solar Center.

Looking at congress, I believe that there are less than a handful of scientists or engineers, This is tragic for our future. Many unscientific decisions are being made. Even the science of local and macro economics is being ignored with spending that ignores any consequences. Great nations rise with the citizenry working toward shared goals until self-centeredness begins to prevail and many are on the dole. About 250 years seems to mark this rise and fall trend, unfortunately we are there unless we return to the basics on which we were founded.

Looking at congress, I believe that there are less than a handful of scientists or engineers, This is tragic for our future. Many unscientific decisions are being made. Even the science of local and macro economics is being ignored with spending that ignores any consequences. Great nations rise with the citizenry working toward shared goals until self-centeredness begins to prevail and many are on the dole. About 250 years seems to mark this rise and fall trend, unfortunately we are there unless we return to the basics on which we were founded.